Detection of Long-Lived Complexes in Ultracold Atom-Molecule Collisions (2105.14960v1)
Abstract: We investigate collisional loss in an ultracold mixture of ${40}$K${87}$Rb molecules and ${87}$Rb atoms, where chemical reactions between the two species are energetically forbidden. Through direct detection of the KRb${2}{*}$ intermediate complexes formed from atom-molecule collisions, we show that a $1064$ nm laser source used for optical trapping of the sample can efficiently deplete the complex population via photo-excitation, an effect which can explain the universal two-body loss observed in the mixture. By monitoring the time-evolution of the KRb${2}{*}$ population after a sudden reduction in the $1064$ nm laser intensity, we measure the lifetime of the complex ($0.39(6)$ ms), as well as the photo-excitation rate for $1064$ nm light ($0.50(3)$ $\mu$s${-1}($kW/cm${2}){-1}$). The observed lifetime is ${\sim}10{5}$ times longer than recent estimates based on the Rice-Ramsperger-Kassel-Marcus statistical theory, which calls for new insight to explain such a dramatic discrepancy.